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Employability Effect On Rating

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bigoc

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I would like to know if someone can help me understand what the ability to work has on the rating percentage of a claim?

My situation is a few lower rating disabilities and a TBI with neuropsychological test that meets the 100% rating by itself.  The TBI rating is being held up buy a lowball rating and on of the VA responses is that I am able to work.

If I meet the objective testing results for a 100% rating can the final decision still be less than 100% because I am working?

I do not want to touch the IU subject because that is not an option for me.  I able to and want to work through my injury.  I do not mean to take away from those that have lost the ability to work.

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The thing I found as I read through tons of regulations, was that evaluations must be based on the average person's disability factor. In otherwords how much it would effect the average person, not me.

I would also look the up the rating guide and see where you think you will fall, if below 100%, kind of worst case scenario. Then you can calculate a total rate. I was surpised when I did this my worst case scenario = 100%. For a long time I was not rounding correctly.

Get a copy of your C&P exam that will help you figure what they are going to do.

I'm 100% and still working. Not easy, but keeps me going.

Stay positive, it's a long process, but what isn't.....

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  • HadIt.com Elder

I was talking to a fellow in one of my pain management groups. This guy had a whole bunch of service-connected problems (and he was TRULY afflicted with multiple disabilities; DMII, ALS, Hep C, lymphoma........you know, BAD SH*T!

He was a real winner though. Had a sense of humor......he'd be crying because of his PN, and still cracking wise.

He got to figuring out his "percentage of disability" (and he had a couple of 100's in there), but, because his very FIRST disability was rated at, like, 20%.....he was at a combined total, with all his problems, 99%. YEAH, NINETY-NINE PERCENT. and NO HOPE of ever breaking the big 100.

We lost him. His wife came be the group meeting and told us how he would look forward to "going to group" every week, even though it hurt him, it made him feel human!

We lost a saint!

"It is cold and we have no blankets.

The little children are freezing to death.

My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food; no one knows where they are-perhaps freezing to death.

I want to have time to look for my children and see how many of them I can find.

Maybe I shall find them among the dead.

Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad.

From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever."

Chief Joseph

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